They may not call it a vision, but rather a “supernatural affirmation.” I have heard it from the mouths of more than one person, and I grew up and live surrounded by Calvinists. My great-aunt used to minister to people in a hospice, and one Netherlands Reformed guy was inconsolable on his deathbed, because he had not received this affirmation.
I believe the theological term for this is bovine skubalon. We don’t believe anything even remotely like that. Not only do Calvinists believe the canon is closed, thus, no extra-Biblical revelation, but even among those very rare Calvinists who aren’t cessationists, such as John Piper and C.J. Mahaney, they still believe the canon is closed and there is no extra-Biblical revelation.
You realize when you say things like this, you can now no longer say anything we say about Catholicism is wrong, right?
I’m not sure what kind of “Calvinists” you were around, but in my experience among Reformed and Calvinist types. I never encountered anything even remotely close to what you are describing. And believe me, I am no friend to Calvinism
Westboro Baptist Church also claimed to be “Calvinist”.
Of course Calvinists don’t believe this. But it’s been my experience that, when it comes to Protestants, Catholics practice a brand of taquiyya, in which they believe they’re defending Catholicism by lying about what we believe and slandering us.
In this case, she’s talking about extra-Biblical revelation, which, at best, would get somebody pastoral counseling and, at worst, such as in this case, have somebody excommunicated for heresy. ((And, yes, before you say it, I already know you’re going to say, “Oh, so just because they don’t agree with your interpretation…”))
She knows that’s not anywhere close to anything we believe, but, to her, it’s OK because she’s defending Catholicism.
Cat:
Here’s a friendly hint–if I were you, I would be careful about sharing this analogy with Evangelical Protestants, including many Baptist and Pentecostal denominations. Many of these denoms do not allow card-playing and consider it devilish, so this analogy would be highly offensive to them.
I don’t find it offensive because of the playing card analogy, but because it’s rude and it’s a strawman meant to mock us and paint our beliefs in a negative light, when it’s clear that the person making the analogy has no idea what we believe.
Unfortunately, the intellectual level of the criticism against us around never rises above “Protestants? Must be a bunch of evil idiots”.
If you don’t want to be offensive how about talking to us and asking us what we believe, rather than making up silly straw-analogies?